Walk through any supermarket and you will see shelves lined with plastic bottles in every colour of the rainbow: green, red, blue – added to plastics to make packaging more appealing. But what happens to all those colorants once the bottle is empty and sent for recycling? At present, not much. Most colorants are lost in the recycling process as the plastic is often burned or, at best, reused. According to Bert Weckhuysen, Distinguished University Professor of Catalysis, Energy, and Sustainability at Utrecht University, this needs to change.
Thanks to a grant from Circular Plastics NL, Weckhuysen now has five years to explore how colorants in plastics can be recycled. Together with Holland Colours and CuRe Technology, his research group aims to develop technologies to recover both inorganic pigments and organic dyes from polyesters, evaluate their quality, and reuse them in recycled materials.
The value of colorants
Colorants in plastics are often lost during the recycling process – a missed opportunity, says Weckhuysen. “Colorants and other additives give PET bottles their desirable properties and therefore their value,” he explains. “These molecules are often expensive to produce and have a significant environmental footprint. What if we could recover those colorants and reuse them, just like we aim to do with the plastic itself?”
Greener solvents
Recycling colorants requires an overhaul of the current recycling process. “Right now, the focus is primarily on recycling the polymers – the long chains of atoms that form plastics,” says Weckhuysen. To include the colorants in this process, they first need to be extracted from the plastic.